Dr. David Meyer of the University of Cincinnati spoke about Godzillus and
answered questions on Sunday, May 4, 2014 during our fossil show,
Geofair. The talk
was titled "A Major Mystery Fossil
Discovery from Cincinnati's Ordovician Rocks."

Seldom does Amateur Paleontology get any better than this.
It's the kind of stuff of which all fossil hunters dream.

Dry Dredgers member Ron Fine was out for a typical fossil hunt at one
of his favorite sites in northern Kentucky. A site he had been visiting many
times before. But this time was different. He spotted an odd texture on a nodule
of shale that he had not seen before. Ron had been fossil hunting all his life
and knew this fossil was something totally
different from any common fossil. His experience told him this was a great find.

Ron found more and more pieces
of this same fossil where the first one was found. He spent all summer at that
site, carefully recording the position of each fragment in situ
and then removing them to take home. At home, he reassembled the fragments to
find this fossil was of humongous proportions - three and a half feet wide and
six and a half feet long. Most Late Ordovician fossils from the area are a few
centimeters long.

Ron found this entire assemblage in a layer of the Southgate
member of the Kope formation in Northern Kentucky near Cincinnati Ohio. The rocks
exposed on this site are 450 million years old. The fossils were alive during
the late Ordovician Period. The average size of fossils in the Kope formation is
about the size of a thumbnail. So this is an extremely large plant or animal for
its time and place.

Ron brought his find to the Dry Dredgers meeting. Lots
of professional and amateur paleontologists examined the reassembled fragments
in detail. Everyone agreed it was something they had never seen.

Renouned Miami Univ. Professor and previous Dry Dredgers president John Pope
takes a first look at the "new" fossil.

Our UC club advisor, Dr. David Meyer
and UC sedimentologist Dr.
Carlton Brett took on the project of finding an identity for what appears to be
the largest fossil ever found in the late Ordovician type-Cincinnatian formations.Here (above) is Dr. David Meyer and Dr. Carlton Brett meeting with the press to explain what Ron
Fine has found.

In the first photo below, Ron Fine, stands beside the poster
describing his interesting fossil find at the GSA meeting. In the second photo
below, Dr. David Meyer and other GSA attendees discuss the implications of Ron's
find.

Godzillus was one of the main attractions at
Geofair 2012,
Cincinnati's premier Gem, Mineral, Fossil and Jewelry Show..Above: Ron Fine standing by his display of the Godzillus
mystery fossil at Geofair 2012.

At the April 2012 70th Anniversary
meeting of Dry Dredgers, Ron Fine was presented with a copy of the
Cincinnati Enquirer front page article about Godzillus. Ron also sported a copy
of the GSA meeting poster introducing Godzillus to the professional
paleontological community.

In timing with the Dry Dredgers' 70th Anniversary and the GSA
meeting, public announcements of the discovery brought the news media from
around the world in April 2012 to announce the huge find.

Dry Dredgers "The Bulletin"
Chronicles Ron's Discovery

A note in the Dry Dredgers Bulletin inviting members to bring
their summer fossil finds to the September meeting in 2011 resulted in the first
look at Ron's new amazing monster fossil.

Dry Dredgers "The Bulletin", September 2011:
"Bring Your Summer Finds to the September Meeting"by Bob Bross

Did you collect any unusual fossils over the summer? On a trip
to a strange and exotic locale was an exciting paleontological find revealed?
Perhaps you were cutting the grass, bent a lawnmower blade on a rock, and
discovered it was a piece of limestone with a trilobite inside? While none of
this may have happened to YOU, all of the above did occur (except for the
trilobite part) with many of our members. Please bring your specimens to the
September meeting to help share in the knowledge that is paleontology. At least
one microscope will be in operation for a close-up look.

(NOW HERE IS THE FIRST PUBLIC MENTION OF RON
FINE'S MYSTERY FOSSIL:)

Dry Dredgers "The Bulletin", October 2011,
"What you missed at the last meeting:"

Ron Fine brought in a mudstone layer from one of his special
Kope sites. The layer bore impressions that initially resembled small ripple
marks. As Ron pointed out, upon closer examination, there appears to be some
finely detailed structure within the larger pattern. Our resident professionals
studied it closely and Ron has agreed to let them study it. Could this be an
imprint of some previously unknown Cincinnatian organism??

Dry Dredgers "The Bulletin", November 2011,
"What you missed at the last meeting:"

Ron fine covered the entire first row desk top with more
pieces from his Kope mystery bio mat material. This was moved to UCís labs for
further study and joined the material Ron brought last month.

Dry Dredgers "The Bulletin", February 2012, "What you
missed at the last meeting:"

Professor Dave Meyer announced that Dry Dredger Ron Fine is the senior author
for a poster session at the upcoming GSA North-Central Section meeting in
Dayton, Ohio April 23 and 24. Entitled: An Enigmatic Lobate Mat-like Fossil(?)
In the Kope Formation (Upper Ordovician), Kenton County, Kentucky, the poster is
based upon Ronís new mystery fossil from the Kope that was displayed at recent
meetings. This find may represent a biological mat heretofore not known from the
Cincinnatian.

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